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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zjkBMFhNj_g
Auf YouTube findest du die angesagtesten Videos und Tracks. Außerdem kannst du eigene Inhalte hochladen und mit Freunden oder gleich der ganzen Welt teilen.
I'm writing a specification for a web app that will store sensitive user data, and the stakeholder asked that I consider a number of fairly standard security practices, but also including that the data be "encrypted at rest", i.e. so that if someone gains physical access to the hard disk at some later date the user data can't be retrieved.
The app is to be Node/Express on a VPS (probably against sqlite3), so since I would be doing that using an environmental variable stored in a file on that same computing instance, is that really providing any extra security?
I guess cloud big boys would be using key management systems to move the key off the local instance, and I could replicate that by using (Hashicorp Vault?) or building a service to keep the key elsewhere, but then I'd need secure access to that service, which once again would involve a key being stored locally.
What's your thoughts, experience, or usual practice around this?
https://www.theguardian.com/media/article/2024/may/14/my-whole-library-is-wiped-out-what-it-means-to-own-movies-and-tv-in-the-age-of-streaming-services
Ownership rights are buried in the fine print and downloading or buying physical copies may be the only ways to keep your favourites
I've been thinking about writing a script that would alert me if there was an updated version of an image I was running.
DockerHub shows an image digest on the page for that tag:
And I can extract the digest for an image I am running with:
docker inspect --format='{{index .RepoDigests 0}}' jc21/nginx-proxy-manager:latest
This matches the one from the DockerHub screenshot. But I can't see a CLI way to get the image digest from a registry. It seems like:
docker manifest inspect jc21/nginx-proxy-manager:latest
should do it, but it pulls out the digest of each of the architecture builds for that tag instead of the one shown in dockerhub.
Is there a way to compare the current local image with one in a registry from the command line? Or perhaps there's a more sensible way to do this?
I'm currently brewing in an Aeropress, and considering one of the lower end espresso machines.
But based on a few comments from James Hoffmann about him drinking filter coffee at home, I'm wondering if an espresso machine is something that people end up using every day, or if people are brewing with simpler methods and just making espressos when they've got time on the weekend or people over?
What's your experience, did you buy a machine and it mostly just takes up counter space, or is it a daily source of joy?
Somewhat bewildered by the millions of Aeropress recipes on youtube, I'm wondering if daily users end up settling into a reliable, simple process that's similar from person to person.
In particular, I note that my method (basically a french press) is vastly different from the one in the instructions which is ground much finer, uses less water, and starts dripping through the filter immediately.
Anyway, here's me:
I'd love to hear yours.
@thirdBreakfast
@lemmy.world